Divided Display of Multiple Cameras

ABSTRACT

A handheld wireless transceiver (e.g. a “smart phone”) is claimed which has cameras in one, two, or three sides such as a left, front, and/or right side. The transceiver has a display divided vertically along a top portion thereof into three sections. Each section displays a version of output from a respectively positioned camera (left, middle, right). Depending on a detected distance of an object to each camera, an alert/alarm is indicated on the corresponding part of the screen to warn a user of the device of a collision with a nearby object, such as while walking. This display is required to be shown, in some embodiments, when one is “texting”.

FIELD OF THE DISCLOSED TECHNOLOGY

The disclosed technology relates to handheld devices with displays, andmore specifically to a handheld transceiver with multiple cameras whoseoutput therefrom shown on a display.

BACKGROUND OF THE DISCLOSED TECHNOLOGY

Hoods on electronic devices surround sides of the device and extendupwards therefrom to provide a barrier to viewing a display on a topside of the device from the sides where the hood is present. Thus, abottom side may be left unimpeded by a hood to allow a person who isadjacent to (closest to) a bottom side to view the display at an acuteangle thereto (looking down from between a position between above andbehind the device).

There is a problem with phones today, with or without a hood, wherein aperson on the phone becomes unaware of their surroundings. In such acase, they are more likely to get into car accidents, walk into objectsincluding other people, and otherwise cause harm. What is needed is away to alert a person when they are about to have a collision withanother object in order to prevent accidents.

SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSED TECHNOLOGY

A handheld wireless transceiver with multiple (two or more) cameras (adevice which converts light into electrical signals for exhibiting on adisplay) has a display (a device which outputs visible light with humanreadable and distinguishable text and/or graphics). The handheld devicegenerally has a back, front, left, right, bottom, and top side, eachsubstantially at 90 degree angles to one another and which substantiallyform a rectangular prism in some embodiments of the disclosedtechnology.

A display is on a front side thereof with the cameras in one or more ofthe left, front, and right sides. As the body of the wirelesstransceiver has a left, front, and right side in embodiments of thedisclosed technology, a camera can be in any, two of, or all of thesesides (such as one camera in each side). Each camera, thus, is at a 90or 180 degree offset from each other camera in embodiments of thedisclosed technology. The cameras can be closer to the front side thanrear side (on the front side or on a left/right side portion which iscloser to the front than the back) in order to ensure that when thedevice is held, the cameras are unobstructed.

Each of a portion of a left, center, and right of the display exhibit a(respective) version of output from corresponding (respective) left,center/front, and right facing cameras in embodiments of the disclosedtechnology. The version of the output can be direct output or can bemodified, such as in color tint or brightness, based on detection of adistance of an object to a respective one of the cameras (e.g. distanceof an object to a left camera modifies the color or brightness of theleft camera output and so forth). Infrared cameras can be used todetermine distance as can size of an object in a viewing field of acamera. A “version” is output which is exactly based on input or outputwhich is a modified version of, but has some recognizablecharacteristics of, the input. For example, when the input is a videosignal the output can include a recognizable but different variant ofthe input, such as by varying color, brightness, or the like asindicated in this disclosure.

Text messaging can cause operation of the cameras, and in fact, in someembodiments, the text messaging only functions when the version ofoutput from the cameras is exhibited on the display. Text messaging ortexting is defined as the preparation for, sending, or receivingmessages which include sending or receiving of written text (howeverinputted) between the handheld wireless transceiver and another devicesuch as using the short message service (SMS) known in the art ofcellular connectivity. Reading or typing of a text message causes, insome embodiments of the disclosed technology, a version of the outputfrom corresponding respective left, forward, and right facing cameras tobe said exhibited on the display.

Each camera receives power (electrical current) from, and/or iselectrically charged by, a direct electrical connection (e.g. copperwire carrying electrical current) with/to the handheld transceiver insome embodiments of the disclosed technology. Output of each camera iswirelessly communicated to the handheld transceiver in some embodimentsand transmitted via direct electrical connection in other embodiments.

The display can be divided into ⅓ portions with a left, center, andright third. A portion of each of these thirds can be dedicated toexhibiting a version of output from a respective left, front, and rightcamera. The output is modified in color, tint, or brightness based onhow close or far away a nearest detected object is in embodiments of thedisclosed technology.

Any device or step to a method described in this disclosure can compriseor consist of that which it is a part of, or the parts which make up thedevice or step. The term “and/or” is inclusive of the items which itjoins linguistically and each item by itself. “Substantially” is definedas “at least 95% of the term being described” and any device or aspectof a device or method described herein can be read as “comprising” or“consisting” thereof.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 shows a perspective view of a handheld wireless transceiver witha side facing camera shown, in an embodiment of the disclosedtechnology.

FIG. 2 shows a reverse side perspective view thereof FIG. 1 with a frontand alternate side facing camera shown.

FIG. 3 shows the handheld wireless transceiver with output from each ofthree cameras.

FIG. 4 shows the handheld wireless transceiver of FIG. 3 with textingand an alarm shown in reference to input from a right facing camera.

FIG. 5 shows the handheld wireless transceiver of FIG. 3 with an alarmshown in reference to input from a front facing camera.

FIG. 6 shows a high level block diagram of devices used to carry outembodiments of the disclosed technology.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE DISCLOSED TECHNOLOGY

A handheld wireless transceiver (e.g. a “smart phone”) is claimed whichhas cameras in each of three sides. That is, the cameras are in theleft, front, and right sides, or some combination thereof, of thehandheld wireless transceiver. These sides are each perpendicular to aprimary display of the device on a top side. The transceiver has adisplay divided vertically along a portion thereof into three sections.Each section displays a version of output from a respectively positionedcamera (left, middle/front, right). Depending on a detected distance ofan object to each camera, an alert/alarm is indicated on thecorresponding part of the screen to warn a user of the device of acollision with a nearby object, such as while walking. This display isrequired to be shown, in some embodiments, when one is “texting”.

FIG. 1 shows a perspective view of a handheld wireless transceiver witha side facing camera shown, in an embodiment of the disclosedtechnology. FIG. 2 shows a reverse side perspective view thereof FIG. 1with a front and alternate side facing camera shown. Here, the handheldwireless transceiver or “smart phone” has a body 10 which hasthere-within at least one transmitter and at least one receiver ortransceiver, such as for sending and receiving data via known protocolsincluding cellular, “WiFi” (802.11), and/or Bluetooth. The device alsohas a input/output port to which an electrical cable 4 having a matchingport 2 which plugs into and creates an electrical connection by whichthe device can be attached to another device electrically. By way of thecable 4 or an internal cable in the smart phone, the smart phone 10 canprovide electrical current to the cameras which can be built into thebody of the smart phone or attached to an outside thereof. In someembodiments, by way of the cable 4, data is sent and received betweenthe device 10 and the cameras 44, 46, and/or 48. In other embodiments,the sending and receiving of data between the phone 10 and cameras 44,46, and/or 48 is performed wirelessly (such as with Bluetooth). Thephone 10 (which refers to the “handheld wireless transceiver”, but“phone” for easier understanding) has a display 20 which exhibitsvisible light. A portion thereof can be dedicated to a virtual keyboard22 and/or left 24, middle, 26, and right 28 outputs from respective left44, middle (front side) 46, and right 48 cameras on the phone. Thephone, in turn, has a left side 34, middle or front side 36, and rightside 38. A “virtual keyboard” is an image of letters or other indiciawhich are operating by touching a part of the display showing same.

A full view of the display 20 can be obtained from a bottom side of thedevice (e.g. when looking from a position closest to the bottom mostedge of the device, where the bottom side/edge is where the I/O port isshown connecting to the cable 4 at connector 2). On this side, closestto the bottom, is where one may grip the phone such that the cameras areunobstructed by the grip. On the left side 34 of the phone 10 is a firstcamera 44 whose output (or a version thereof) is at a left ⅓, of thedisplay 20, numbered 24. On the front side 36 of the phone 10 is asecond camera 46 whose output (or a version thereof) is shown in themiddle ⅓ of the display 20, numbered 26. On the right side 38 of thephone 10 is a right camera 38 whose output (or a version thereof) isshown on a right ⅓ of the display 20, which is numbered 28.

FIG. 3 shows the handheld wireless transceiver with output from each ofthree cameras. Here, by way of example only, there is an external object54 or sphere 54 to the left of the device. The directional indicatorsused in this disclosure are relative to a direction of typical use bysomeone operating the phone 10 where “bottom” is closest to the user,“top” furthest, and “left” and “right” being respective sidesthere-between. An image thereof the sphere 54 is received by the leftcamera 44 and displayed on the left ⅓ of the display 20, at numberedregion 24. Likewise, a middle or top camera 46 receives an image of apyramid 56 which is shown in the center ⅓ of the display at numberedregion 26. Further, a right camera 48 receives in image of a cube 58which is displayed within a right ⅓ of the display 20 at numbered region28. In this manner, each ⅓ section of the screen has output from adifferent camera in embodiments of the disclosed technology. Two camerasmay be used in other embodiments, such as just a left and right camera,a top/left camera and a top/right camera, and so forth. The camera viewscan then be merged together in a larger view such as a panoramic view orthe like.

In any of the above cases, when an object is determined to be movingcloser to the device 10 or respective camera seeing the object, then analarm condition can be triggered or the display changed. This happenswhen, for example, the sphere 54 is within a pre-defined distance of thephone 10 (such as within 1 meter or 3 feet) and/or is moving closer tophone over time and remains in view of the camera. Such object trackingis known in the art by way of using infrared light and determining aresponse time thereof for each point in space where such light wastransmitted. Additional infrared cameras may be necessary in such anembodiment. Object tracking using visible light and recognition ofpoints in a frame and movement thereof is used in these or otherembodiments of the disclosed technology, as known in the art.

As shown in FIG. 3, in this case the sphere 54 is within a collisionalarm distance and/or is moving towards the device while staying inframe (either because the forward movement of the device is matchingthat of the object, or the device 10 is stationary while the sphere 54moves closer; it is also possible that a user of the device 10 isholding the device sideways and moving forward or is shuffling to aside). The portion of the display 20 which corresponds to output fromthe camera 44 on the left side (numbered 24) is modified to warn theuser of the device. This modification shown is a change in backgroundcolor, a change in tint of the screen, or another visual change whichalerts a user of the device. This can also include blinking theafore-described changes or blinking this portion of the display entirelyor any combinations thereof.

FIG. 4 shows the handheld wireless transceiver of FIG. 3 with textingand an alarm shown in reference to input from a right facing camera.FIG. 5 shows the handheld wireless transceiver of FIG. 3 with an alarmshown in reference to input from a front facing camera. In thesefigures, what has been described above with reference to FIG. 4 iscarried out respectively for a pyramid 56 and top camera 46, and cube 58and right camera 48. The front or top camera 48 can be used by itselfwith output covering part of the display 10 in order to work only withavoiding collisions with objects in front of the device. This is usefulwhen walking forward and avoiding walking into objects. Again, theshapes shown are examples of external objects and their relativedistance to the phone 10. Detection of any object is within the scope ofthe disclosed technology.

Referring back to FIG. 3, on a part of the display 20 is a screenshowing text messaging 21. “Text messaging” and “texting” has adefinition in the Summary. When he text messaging feature is active onthe phone, such as when a particular set of coded instructions isexecuted on the device allowing input of a text message or display of areceived text message which is sent and/or received via wirelesstransmission, then in some embodiments a camera or cameras 44, 36,and/or 48 are activated. The display 20 then displays output or aversion of output from the cameras on the display at locations 24, 26,and 28. Thus, when an interface for sending and/or receiving textmessaging is shown on the display 20 (such as at 21) this is shown with,or as a result thereof, the display of camera output (26, 26, and/or 28)is also shown.

FIG. 6 shows a high level diagram of devices which are used to carry outembodiments of the disclosed technology. Device 400 comprises aprocessor 450 that controls the overall operation of the computer byexecuting the device's program instructions which define such operation.The device's program instructions may be stored in a storage device 420(e.g., magnetic disk, database) and loaded into memory 430 whenexecution of the console's program instructions is desired. Thus, thedevice's operation will be defined by the device's program instructionsstored in memory 430 and/or storage 420, and the console will becontrolled by processor 450 executing the console's programinstructions. A device 400 also includes one or a plurality of inputnetwork interfaces for communicating with other devices via a network(e.g., the internet). The device 400 further includes an electricalinput interface. A device 400 also includes one or more output networkinterfaces 410 for communicating with other devices. Device 400 alsoincludes input/output 440 representing devices which allow for userinteraction with a computer (e.g., display, keyboard, mouse, speakers,buttons, etc.). One skilled in the art will recognize that animplementation of an actual device will contain other components aswell, and that FIG. 4 is a high level representation of some of thecomponents of such a device for illustrative purposes. It should also beunderstood by one skilled in the art that the method and devicesdepicted in FIGS. 1 through 5 may be implemented on a device such as isshown in FIG. 6.

While the disclosed technology has been taught with specific referenceto the above embodiments, a person having ordinary skill in the art willrecognize that changes can be made in form and detail without departingfrom the spirit and the scope of the disclosed technology. The describedembodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrativeand not restrictive. All changes that come within the meaning and rangeof equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.Combinations of any of the methods, systems, and devices describedherein-above are also contemplated and within the scope of the disclosedtechnology.

I claim:
 1. A handheld transceiver with display and multiple cameras,comprising: a body with a back side, front side, left side, right side,bottom side, and top side; a display on a front side thereof; at leasttwo cameras, each on a different of said front, left, and right sideoriented substantially at 90 or 180 degrees from each other camera. 2.The handheld transceiver of claim 1, where said at least two cameras arethree cameras comprising a camera on said top side, a camera on saidleft side, and a camera on said right side of said body.
 3. The handheldtransceiver of claim 1, wherein said at least two cameras comprise acamera on said left side and a camera on said right side facingsubstantially opposite directions from one another.
 4. The handheldtransceiver of claim 1, wherein each of said at least two cameras iscloser to said top side than said bottom side and face away from saidbody.
 5. The handheld transceiver of claim 2, wherein said top side isperpendicular to each of said front side, left side, and right side; andsaid front side is perpendicular to said left side and said right side.6. The handheld transceiver of claim 2, wherein each of a portion of aleft, center, and right of said display exhibit a version of output fromcorresponding to, in order, said left, said front, and said rightcameras.
 7. The handheld transceiver of claim 6, wherein said version ofsaid output is modified based on detection of distance of an object to arespective said camera of said left, said front, and said right facingcameras.
 8. The handheld transceiver of claim 7, wherein said modifiedsaid output is a change in color and/or brightness corresponding to anearness of an object to said handheld transceiver.
 9. The handheldtransceiver of claim 6, wherein reading or typing of a text messagecauses said version of said output from corresponding respective saidleft, said front, and said right facing cameras to be exhibited on saiddisplay.
 10. The handheld transceiver of claim 1, wherein each saidcamera is activated when it is detected that a person is interactingwith said display.
 11. The handheld transceiver of claim 1, wherein eachsaid camera is activated when it is detected that a person is using atext messaging feature of said handheld trasceiver.
 12. A wirelesshandheld transceiver comprising: left, front, and right sides each withan embedded camera; wherein said wireless transceiver comprises adisplay facing in a direction which is transverse to each embeddedcamera; and wherein a portion of a center ⅓ of said display exhibits aversion of output from said embedded camera on said front.
 13. Thewireless handheld transceiver of claim 12, wherein simultaneous to saidoutput in said center ⅓ of said display: a portion of said left ⅓ ofsaid display exhibits a version of output from said embedded camera onsaid left; and a portion of said right ⅓ of said display exhibits aversion of output from embedded camera on said right.
 14. The kit ofclaim 13, wherein each said version of each said output is modifiedbased on a determined distance of a nearest object to each saidrespective camera.
 15. The kit of claim 14, wherein texting using saidhandheld wireless transceiver causes each said output to be exhibited.16. The kit of claim 15, wherein operation of an ability to conduct saidtexting is contingent upon each said output being exhibited on saiddisplay.